מוצרים מתוייגים עם 'Holocaust survivors'

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My Lodz No Longer Exists - The Story of Yosef Neuhaus

Ages 15+ Subtitles in English

 

DVD

NIS 38.00

Menachem & Fred: Thoughts and Memories of Two Brothers

Frederick Raymes and Menachem Mayer

NIS 78.00

No Place for Tears: From Jedrzejów to Denmark

Sabina Rachel Kałowska

NIS 78.00

The Journey of Ilse Kaufmann: Vienna-Prague-Buenos Aires

Ilse Kaufmann and Helena Pardo

NIS 78.00

Days of Rain

Enzo Tayar

NIS 78.00

By the Grace of Strangers: Two Boys’ Rescue During the Holocaust

Gabriel Mermall; Norbert Yasharoff | Foreword by David Silberklang

NIS 78.00

The Fire and the Light

Herman Kahan | Foreword by Elie Wiesel

NIS 78.00

In the Struggle: Memoirs from Grodno and the Forests

Leib Reizer | Foreword by Martin Gilbert

NIS 78.00

Mama, It Will Be Alright

Sol Silberzweig

NIS 78.00

Fighting for Survival

E. H. (Dan) Kampelmacher | Foreword by Dan Michman

NIS 78.00

A Physician Inside the Warsaw Ghetto, 1939-1943

Mordechai Lensky | Foreword by Samuel Kassow

NIS 78.00

In the Shadow of Death

Joseph Foxman | Foreword by Abraham Foxman

NIS 78.00

The Story I Never Told: From Kovno and Dachau to a New Life

Uri Chanoch | Judith Chanoch

NIS 91.00

The Fragile Fabric of Survival: A Boy’s Account of Auschwitz

Tomáš Radil, Academic Editor: Bella Guterman

It is impossible to forget Auschwitz-Birkenau. It is useful to remember the basic ethical principles that allowed individuals to retain their humanity even in conditions that were barely human. Born in the Slovakian capital Bratislava, Tomáš Radil grew up in Párkány (Štúrovo), a small border town on the Danube that became part of Hungary in 1938. When the Wehrmacht occupied the country in mid-March 1944, the tide of war had long turned against Germany. Despite the precarious military situation on all fronts, the Nazis did not abandon their genocidal plans. Within eight weeks, hundreds of thousands of Hungarian Jews were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where most of them were murdered immediately after arrival.

NIS 91.00

A Boy from Buština: A Son. A Survivor. A Witness.

Andrew Burian

 

A sheltered boy from the small town of Buština (then Czechoslovakia, now Ukraine), Andrew had a beautiful carefree childhood. At the age of thirteen, his world was shattered. Andrew’s wartime odyssey began with deportation from his hometown to Mateszalka ghetto in Hungary. From there, Andrew and his family were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where he survived countless selections and near death experiences. In the freezing winter of 1945, he survived the infamous “death march” evacuation of Auschwitz-Birkenau and was loaded into a cattle car for the long journey to the Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria. Andrew survived another death-march to the Gunskirchen concentration camp from which he was ultimately liberated by the U.S. army. Andrew’s journey took him through Hungary, Poland, Austria, Czechoslovakia, England and, finally, the USA where he made a new life.

NIS 91.00
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